Can anyone answer a question about the Norman short? What on earth was it supposed to be about? It was the most baffling short film I have ever seen. You can see the point of the educational shorts (we got some government funding and damn if we are not going to use it) even if we do a God awful job of it like the cylinders one, and the point of the thinly disguised advert ones like one made by the car company were the kids are eating a truck load of fruit every day and pooping every five minutes.But the Norman one seemed to have no plot or purpose.Who would make it and why?

Can anyone answer a question about the Norman short? What on earth was it supposed to be about? It was the most baffling short film I have ever seen. You can see the point of the educational shorts (we got some government funding and damn if we are not going to use it) even if we do a God awful job of it like the cylinders one, and the point of the thinly disguised advert ones like one made by the car company were the kids are eating a truck load of fruit every day and pooping every five minutes.But the Norman one seemed to have no plot or purpose.Who would make it and why?

Back in the 80s between movies stations like HBO and Showtime would show "short films" meant to entertain or whatever. They had no real "purpose" or anything other than just to be some filler between movies. (to give the films meaningful start-times for VCR programming and shuch. The 80s were weird. ) So that's it. It had no real "point" other than to entertain. I think Norman was "supposed to be" a American take on Mr. Bean... maybe? But it wasn't meant to be an educational, informational or propaganda short just a "humorous" little story to watch before Red Heat came on.

Back in the 80s between movies stations like HBO and Showtime would show "short films" meant to entertain or whatever. They had no real "purpose" or anything other than just to be some filler between movies. (to give the films meaningful start-times for VCR programming and shuch. The 80s were weird. ) So that's it. It had no real "point" other than to entertain. I think Norman was "supposed to be" a American take on Mr. Bean... maybe? But it wasn't meant to be an educational, informational or propaganda short just a "humorous" little story to watch before Red Heat came on.

The copy of Norman Checks In on YouTube is taken from one of these showings. And to get technical about it, they're Canadian-made.

Apparently there will be another Norman short before NOTLD, per the RT Facebook page.

I just found the Norman Kickstarter short unriffed on YT. Frightening.